Community Power Could Rebuild Ukraine’s Energy Future
Community Power Could Rebuild Ukraine’s Energy Future
Community Power Could Rebuild Ukraine’s Energy Future
Ukraine must transition to decentralized, community owned energy to boost resilience, empower citizens and avoid rebuilding a vulnerable centralized system.

For Ukraine, this experience is more relevant than it may first appear. The word “cooperative” still carries negative associations because Soviet and post-Soviet practices often distorted the concept. But genuine cooperatives are not bureaucratic relics. They are democratic, member-owned organizations created so people can meet common needs under fairer conditions than the market often provides.
In energy, this means that a community can jointly invest in a solar plant, a biogas facility, a battery system, a local heating solution or backup power for critical infrastructure. The benefits do not disappear upward. They remain in the community: more reliable energy, local income, jobs, taxes, lower costs and a stronger sense of control over essential infrastructure.